all the houses on both sides of Pomeroy Terrace to the jog at Hancock and Williams streets;

homes on the meadows side of Bridge Street up to just beyond the end of Lampron Park (which is on the other side of the street);

homes on the north side of Bridge Street to Historic Northampton and on the south side to the post office;

most of the homes on Phillips Place and a few homes on Butler Place.

Meet at Historic Northampton at 10 am. Rain date TBA.

The application for the district has now been finalized and submitted to the Massachusetts Historical Commission. Copies of the plan and the Bridge Street Cemetery Preservation Master Plan will be available.

To view the Pomeroy Terrace Historic District application online, click on the blue button.

The tour will be led by Steve Strimer, member of the Historic Northampton Board of Trustees and The David Ruggles Center. Steve enjoys identifying the work of William Fenno Pratt who laid out Phillips Place in 1847. Many houses of distinction in the proposed district are Pratt designs or commissions. Residents are encouraged to bring any artifacts they have and to share stories they know about the neighborhood. The tour is co-sponsored by Historic Northampton and the Ward 3 Neighborhood Association.